Great pic advertising the 'Our Song' single in Disc &
Music Echo, September 26 1970 - Thanks to Jim F.

Stuart led a band of this name around 1967 before putting it on hold to try
his luck with Alan Gorrie (future mainstay of the Average White Band) in London
with the Scots of St James. All did not work out and late '68 saw the Dream
Police active again with the line up above. A very adventurous band in the
numbers they covered such as Joni Mitchell's 'Carrie' and Traffic's 'No Face,
No Name, No number'. The band quickly became one of Scotland's bigger crowd
pullers along with Chris McClure Section, the Poets, the Stoics, Tear Gas and
the Bay City Rollers! See the 'Transplant' (Scotland's Teenage Magazine!) poll
from 1969 reproduced below. They also made the usual forays to London in search
of the big time. See Marquee ad at end of page. Note that the big
guys played midweek while the lesser-knowns got the week-end gig.

What are these singles, all Junior Campbell productions, like? 'Coming on
home' - Junior makes them do a straight remake of the Marms own cover of
this syrupy song (or it might have been the other way round!) Good guitar hook though. 'Living' - Fast paced heavier
number. Very prominent and active bass and two lead guitar parts plus lots of
wild keyboard and great vox. 'Our Song' - acoustic verses and heavier chorus -
much like a well written Marms LP track. 'Much too much' - Another good band
workout. Soulful vocals and harmony voices plus a guitar solo. Our Song is the
most memorable but still not catchy enough for a hit. 'I've got no choice'
is a country style song with petal steel guitar and high pitched vocal - nothing
much more to commend it. 'What's the cure for happiness' - the best of the
pairing - has gentle acoustic verses interspersed by more up-tempo choruses.
Very Marmalade like with its harmony vocals - well it would be wouldn't
it. Many thanks to Mike Breen for the loan of the last single.

The debut did get them on TV though. Think it was Five O' Clock Club or Lift Off
- hosted by Ayshea Brough,
Wally Whyton (ex Vipers skiffle group and 'multi million selling' kids LPs!' ),
Fred Barker (a puppet dog) and Ollie Beak (a puppet owl). A great show that
Bowie and many others were not ashamed to play on!

Lack of chart success seems to have led members of the band to jump ship.
Charlie Smith replaced Dougie Henderson in the Marmalade. Ted McKenna moved
from 'Bubbles' to replace Charlie'. The end came when Hamish and Matt quit to
form Berserk Crocodiles with Wullie Munro (drums) from Tear Gas and Frazer
Watson (Trash) in late 1970/1971. Recall seeing Dream Police at the
Bobby Jones Ayr, Community Centre - Dalmellington and the Cosmo in Carlisle (or
was that Berserk Crocodiles) and perhaps even hazier memories of other gigs.
No theatrics, no scandal just great musician ship and vocals plus Hamish's hair
- see pics above (top one nicked without permission from Jim Wilkie's excellent book -
'Blue Suede Brogans' and copyright belongs to the Rock Garden Glasgow but we
hope they will forgive us in return for the publicity).

Charlie later resurfaced in the Marmalade and Blue (several times) - see
Blue link. Joe Breen was briefly in the '74/75 Marmalade (see Link), had a solo
album out and is still writing. Hamish of
course went on to fame with the Average White Band and later was in Paul
McCartney's band. He had a solo album out in 2002 with a classy jazz blues late
night club feel. Matt Irvine went into session work with Squeeze and Paul Young.
Many thanks for info to Mike Breen.